548 research outputs found
Output consensus of nonlinear multi-agent systems with unknown control directions
In this paper, we consider an output consensus problem for a general class of
nonlinear multi-agent systems without a prior knowledge of the agents' control
directions. Two distributed Nussbaumtype control laws are proposed to solve the
leaderless and leader-following adaptive consensus for heterogeneous multiple
agents. Examples and simulations are given to verify their effectivenessComment: 10 pages;2 figure
H-2 suboptimal output synchronization of heterogeneous multi-agent systems
This paper deals with the H2 suboptimal output synchronization problem for
heterogeneous linear multi-agent systems. Given a multi-agent system with
possibly distinct agents and an associated H2 cost functional, the aim is to
design output feedback based protocols that guarantee the associated cost to be
smaller than a given upper bound while the controlled network achieves output
synchronization. A design method is provided to compute such protocols. For
each agent, the computation of its two local control gains involves two Riccati
inequalities, each of dimension equal to the state space dimension of the
agent. A simulation example is provided to illustrate the performance of the
proposed protocols.Comment: 9 pages, 2 figures. arXiv admin note: text overlap with
arXiv:2001.0759
Event-triggering architectures for adaptive control of uncertain dynamical systems
In this dissertation, new approaches are presented for the design and implementation of networked adaptive control systems to reduce the wireless network utilization while guaranteeing system stability in the presence of system uncertainties. Specifically, the design and analysis of state feedback adaptive control systems over wireless networks using event-triggering control theory is first presented. The state feedback adaptive control results are then generalized to the output feedback case for dynamical systems with unmeasurable state vectors. This event-triggering approach is then adopted for large-scale uncertain dynamical systems. In particular, decentralized and distributed adaptive control methodologies are proposed with reduced wireless network utilization with stability guarantees.
In addition, for systems in the absence of uncertainties, a new observer-free output feedback cooperative control architecture is developed. Specifically, the proposed architecture is predicated on a nonminimal state-space realization that generates an expanded set of states only using the filtered input and filtered output and their derivatives for each vehicle, without the need for designing an observer for each vehicle. Building on the results of this new observer-free output feedback cooperative control architecture, an event-triggering methodology is next proposed for the output feedback cooperative control to schedule the exchanged output measurements information between the agents in order to reduce wireless network utilization. Finally, the output feedback cooperative control architecture is generalized to adaptive control for handling exogenous disturbances in the follower vehicles.
For each methodology, the closed-loop system stability properties are rigorously analyzed, the effect of the user-defined event-triggering thresholds and the controller design parameters on the overall system performance are characterized, and Zeno behavior is shown not to occur with the proposed algorithms --Abstract, page iv
Robust Distributed Stabilization of Interconnected Multiagent Systems
Many large-scale systems can be modeled as groups of individual dynamics, e.g., multi-vehicle systems, as well as interconnected multiagent systems, power systems and biological networks as a few examples. Due to the high-dimension and complexity in configuration of these infrastructures, only a few internal variables of each agent might be measurable and the exact knowledge of the model might be unavailable for the control design purpose. The collective objectives may range from consensus to decoupling, stabilization, reference tracking, and global performance guarantees. Depending on the objectives, the designer may choose agent-level low-dimension or multiagent system-level high-dimension approaches to develop distributed algorithms. With an inappropriately designed algorithm, the effect of modeling uncertainty may propagate over the communication and coupling topologies and degrade the overall performance of the system. We address this problem by proposing single- and multi-layer structures. The former is used for both individual and interconnected multiagent systems. The latter, inspired by cyber-physical systems, is devoted to the interconnected multiagent systems. We focus on developing a single control-theoretic tool to be used for the relative information-based distributed control design purpose for any combinations of the aforementioned configuration, objective, and approach. This systematic framework guarantees robust stability and performance of the closed-loop multiagent systems. We validate these theoretical results through various simulation studies
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